Peace day turns into peace month……the power of the new web!
Posted by: Justin Medved in 21st Century Literacy, Global Collaborations, learningCross post from http://www.medagogy.edublogs.org
Big movements start with small steps……………..
A simple conversation with Scott last week started like most conversations at ISB, passing each other in the hall. Scott just attended the LEARNING 2.0 and is eager to explore many of the ideas and tool he picked up there.
“Hey Justin! I’m looking to get a little deeper with peace day this year, got any ideas?”
Scott is always looking for meaningful ways to get his students engaged in the writing process and reflect on a deeper level. He has been using his classroom blog as a tool in process but up until now it did not really have an audience other than parents. It was time to change that. Together we came up with some questions for the post that we felt would stretch students to think about peace and what it means to them. You can see the post here.
Time was a factor here as Peace Day was the next day. As we know the read/write web is a powerful tool that can quickly and easily bring people from all over the world together to share and collaborate. The only barrier is knowing that each other exists. I decided to reach out to all my contacts and get the ball rolling. I put out call to teachers and coordinators to have their students stop by and share their perspective along with the country they came from. I also helped Scott embed a cluster map on his site so we could track where the hits were coming from. If you don’t have one on your site get one today! The goal of this little post was to get a few different perspectives from other students to create and opportunity for further conversation about peace.
The results…………..112 posts!!!!!
Mark Picketts at Carol Morgan School , Dominican Republic answered the call and got several of his teachers to involve their classes
Mark Dilworth at International School Manila, answered the call and also got his teachers involved.
Kim Cofino at International School Bangkok , answered the call and reached out to her global community to bring in some great comments from the U.S
Carolyn Foote - Librarian, Texas , answered the call and wrote a fantastic post about Scott’s experiment and featured some of her favorite student comments!
Maryland answered the call. Thank you!
Philadelphia answered the call. Thank you!
The list goes on…………….
One conversation…….led to one email………….led to 112 posts………..which led to a global audience and a conversation about peace!
That is what these tools are for. That is why they MUST be BLENDED into everything we do. Because the time invested reap rewards that keep on giving.
All it took was a teacher willing to ask “How can I go deeper?”
If you are reading this and interested in involving your class please drop by Scott’s Learning Blog and have your students post. We would love to read their thoughts!
One small step at a time.

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September 26th, 2007 at 9:26 pm
This is awesome. Well done to all of you. It’s what both learning and thinking about peace should be…globally involved.